Globalfoundries talked about its plans to start volume production
using 28-20nm process technologies and also to expand its production
capacity, at a press conference held Jan 25, 2011 held in Tokyo.

The company intends to throw down the gauntlet against Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC), which is currently leading
the industry, in terms of both technology development centered on
micro fabrication and production capacity.

28nm process technologies

The US-based company said that the low-power 28nm high-k gate
dielectric film/metal gate (HKMG) technology will enable new use
cases and continued rapid expansion in endpoints (devices and people
i.e. 3G subscribers), content (i.e. internet video will dominate
traffic in 2014) and traffic (i.e. mobile traffic is doubling every
year).

Globalfoundries said that it has improved the design flow for 28nm
process technologies. The company employed the high-k gate dielectric
film/metal gate based on the "Gate First" method. Compared to the
"Gate Last" method used by rival TSMC, the new 28nm "Gate First"
method enables to reduce the area of a chip by 10 to 20%, the
company said. In addition, compared to the 40nm process, the 28nm
process offers a ~100% increase in density, up to 50% increased speed
and 50% reduction in energy/switch, while it sustains the 40nm
layout style advantages.

The company plans to offer the SLP (low power consumption), HP (high
speed) and HPP (super high-speed) 28nm processes. Volume production
is scheduled to start in 2011, together with IBM, Samsung and
STMicroelectronics N.V. under the Common Platform Alliance. Globalfoundries initially participate to the Alliance with 4 28nm
fabs.

The company expects to receive design data from the first customer in
April to June 2011. However, Globalfoundries has already applied
the same high-k gate dielectric film/metal gate technology to produce
AMD's 32nm Llano microprocessor, which microprocessor (quad-core x86
/ DirectX 11 GPU) with volume ramp scheduled this year.

In addition, significant growth is expected for future mobile
devices. Globalfoundries is collaborating with ARM for the industry's
first 28nm HKMG SoC, which will have a ARM Cortex A9 core. The SoC
will consume up to 30% less power and will offer 100% more battery
life, over the 45/40nm SoC. In addition, it will offer enhanced
multitasking, multimedia playback, interactive media and graphics,
running at 2GHZ~2.5GHz (Vdd 0.85V).

The result of the collaboration between Globalfoundries and ARM is
the 28nm "Semper" Cortex A9 based SoC, which will be used as a
"Technology Test Vehicle." The SoC features more than 50M stdcell
transistors, 16 Mbps memory and a dual core macro with wide
operational frequency range of 10Mhz ~ 2.5GHz.

20nm process technologies

The next step after the 28nm technologies is the 20nm and not the
expected 22nm.

Globalfoundries said that it has already started cooperation with its
first customers and plans to begin shuttle services in the latter
half of 2011 and production in the latter half of 2012.

The 20nm process will enable ~50% area shrink for digital logic and
SRAM, the company said.

For its 20nm technologies, Globalfoundries will use the high-k gate
dielectric film/metal gate technology based on the "Gate Last"
method and not the "Gate First" method that will be followed for the
28nm. The company intends to offer multiple processes including SLP
and HP for its 20nm technologies.

Lithography

As for lithography technologies, Globalfoundries will introduce the
Extreme Ultra-violet (EUV) lithography.

The company plans to install production-level EUV tools in Fab 8 in
New York in 2H 2012, aiming at volume production by 2014/2015.
To start the volume production as early as possible, it will not
introduce a pre-production tool and will use the volume production
equipment from the beginning. The company also intends to start
applying EUV lithography for future 16-15nm or more advanced process
technologies.

The company will increase the production capacity of the Fab 1 in
Germany to 80,000 wafers per month (online in mid 2011, focused on
40/45nm technology with scalability to 28nm and below) and the
capacity of the Fab 8 in the US to 60,000 wafers per month (online in
2013, focused on 22/20nm technology).

Moreover, the company will expand the production capacities of its
200mm lines, intending to focus on the commissioned manufacturing of
MEMS devices such as acceleration sensors and RF devices.

Globalfoundries also plan to develop an ecosystem in Abu Dhabi.
Positioned in an area close to Abu Dhabi airport site, the company
plans to establish a significant technology and manufacturing presence
to the area by sharing knowledge and practices from NY, Dresden and
Singapore plants. In cooperation with MIT, Globalfoundries will offer
Master's in Microelectronics and international scholarships for Elite
Emirati Engineering students.